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Bill King Seeks the Political Center in Houston

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Bill KingIt’s been hard going for moderates lately. The 2014 election cycle was the latest in a long series of culls, as hardline Republicans pushed their more conciliatory colleagues out of office and solidified their ideological hold on Congress. State governments haven’t necessarily fared any better: Texas now finds itself saddled with both national Sen. Ted Cruz (who recently derided net neutrality as “Obamacare for the Internet”—a statement so cynical it transcends mere idiocy) and Lt. Gov.-elect Dan Patrick, a man publicly pushing the idea that ISIS insurgents are sneaking across the Mexican border. The inmates have been running the asylum for a while; it was only a matter of time before they went off their meds.

Bill King argues that this situation is politically untenable and, more to the point, isn’t what people want. His new book, Unapologetically Moderate: My Search for a Rational Center in American Politics, collects a series of columns King wrote during an ongoing stint at the Houston Chronicle. In sections on immigration reform, health care and gun control, King hammers home a few central themes: Our nation is fundamentally centrist; our politics don’t reflect that truth; as a result, policy suffers and voters disengage.

King himself has a background in politics as a two-term mayor of Kemah, and he’s considered a possible contender in the 2015 Houston mayoral election. He’s also something of a wonk, with experience in business (he was president of Southwest Airport Services) and public policy (including a position with the task force that rewrote Houston’s hurricane evacuation plan in the aftermath of Hurricane Rita in 2005).

Reasonableness seems to be King’s guiding principle, and the columns collected in Unapologetically Moderate seldom find him especially fired up on any particular topic. He seems allergic to rhetoric in general, reserving most of his few flourishes for columns on government dysfunction. In “No Place to Call Home,” originally published in 2011, King wrote, “…the great middle of America has time and again served as ballast for our ship of state, keeping her from listing too far to port or starboard. The challenge this time around will be to see if it can keep the ship from splitting apart.”

  • don76550

    No King, I am not “saddled” with Ted Cruz or Dan Patrick. I proudly voted for them. What I would be saddled with is being represented by a gun grabbing, baby killing, tax gouging, anti American lying member of the marxist democrat party. Being represented by the likes of a Bill King is politically untenable to me. Guess most Texans agree with me, since that large bloody object in their hands is their ass that was handed to them on election day.

  • Tricky Rick

    King is not talking about Democrats as much as he is addressing the difference between reasonable Republicans and wing nuts like Cruz and Patrick (formerly Dan Goab of Maryland). The theme of wing nut Republicans is “you’re with us or you are against us”. This looks great on a business card, but it is a shitty way to govern. Example, these folks want no abortion exception for rape or incest. So, when your daughter, cousin, niece or female friend shows up your doorstep bleeding to death, needing your help because she decided to get some illegal medical care rather than admit she was raped and be forced to have the rapists child, you can call her a murderer and slam the door in her face. Then you can call the cops to come remove the large bloody object from your front porch. That’s what Jesus would do, right?

    Oh, and most Texans didn’t vote. Not a ringing endorsement.

    • 1bimbo

      it’s amazing how progressives equate staunch constitutionalist with ‘wing nut’.. when did it happen that the donkey party became the party that worships government? .. by the way women who would do awful things to themselves to kill a baby growing inside them have mental issues and need way more than a legislator’s ‘help’

  • http://www.ragingelephantsradio.com/ Doc Greene

    If you sit in the middle of the road you get run over by cars going both directions. We have been slouching toward tyranny for too long. Its time to save Texas, the last great place, from destruction. Conservative biblical based values are the only way to do that.

  • Tricky Rick

    I’d like to thank the Texas Observer for creating a space in which Republicans can freely express themselves in a way that shows what truly vile creatures they have become. Texas is lost indeed, to the fake Christians hiding behind the Bible they have so gleefully perverted and fake patriots hiding behind our flag while they destroy the nation. So keep those posts coming and expose your true nature for all to see. Don’t be shy. Be sure to direct all your friends here as well. Continue to show everyone unmasked Republican hate.

  • Robert E Hall

    I agree with Bill King occasionally but I admire Jim Hightower’s remark, “The only thing in the middle road is dead armadillos.” Too often “moderates” seem to lack a gag reflex when confronted with an outrage.